Thursday, June 17, 2010
Whose that Ancestor?
Aud
The Deeply Wealthy and Deeply Minded.
Aud was the second daughter of Ketil Flatnose, a Norwegian hersir, and Yngvid Ketilsdóttir, daughter of Ketill Wether, a hersir from Ringarike. Aud married Olaf the White (Oleif), son of King Ingjald, who had named himself King of Dublin after going on voyages to Britain and then conquering the shire of Dublin. They had a son named Thorstein the Red. After Oleif was killed in battle in Ireland, Aud and Thorstein journeyed to the Hebrides. Thorstein married there and had many children; he also became a great warrior king, conquering over half of Scotland; however, he was killed in battle after being betrayed by his people. After this happened Aud, who was at Caithness, learned of her son’s death and built a Knarr, a Viking era ship commonly built for Atlantic voyages. She did this secretly in the forest possibly because women were not allowed to be in possession of these ships, or because she did not want anyone to know that she was building one. After its completion, Aud sailed to the Orkneys. There she married off one of her granddaughters, Groa, the daughter of Thorstein the Red. Aud then set off for Iceland.[2]
On her ship were twenty men, all of which were free, but she was still the leader of them, proving that she was respected, but also that she was strong-willed enough to command a ship alone without the help of a man. She also a great deal of other men on her ship, who were prisoners from Viking raids near and around Britain. They all came from good families, and were called bondsmen. Aud gave these men their freedom once they were in Iceland, making them freed-men, a class between slave and free, where they were not owned, but did not have all the rights of a free man. She also gave them all a great deal of land to farm on and make a living. One of these men was Vifil, who was given Vifilsdal, part of Hvammur í Skeggjadal (commonly translated as "Hvamm"), the area in which Aud settled. When she arrived in Iceland, she claimed all the land in the Dales (Dalasýsla) between the Dagverdara and Skraumuhlaupsa. [3]
Aud is a very important figure in Icelandic history because she was one of the first settlers and claimed a great deal of land. However, more importantly, is the fact that she did this and was a woman. Women, who did not have all the capabilities of men at the time, but Aud was a very important figure for her time, as her name would suggest, and she took control of her circumstances, and became one of the legendary settlers of Iceland. Unlike most other Icelandic settlers Aud was a baptized and devout Christian. Aud put up crosses on her land and prayed regularly at Krossholar hill, now known as Krosshólaborg.[4]
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Hi, this is very interested for me....because I research in Iceland-history and Aud is the Protagonist from my new nouvelle about the viking-period in the 9. century in Iceland....Let me ask: why do you write this here? Is this your family-history?
ReplyDeletegreetings from the north
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